How to deploy multiple spring boot application jar in open liberty server?
You cannot have multiple SpringBoot uber jar applications running in the same Liberty server. You will need to either use multiple Liberty servers or you will need to change to use the war option for SpringBoot. You can deploy multiple SpringBoot war applications to a single Liberty server.
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I want to create a war file of Spring Cloud Gateway Project (version 2.1.2.RELEASE) and deploy it on a container which supports reactive, is it possible? which application server is suggested?
AFAIK this is possible, but I wouldn't recommended it. If you package your application as a runnable jar it will ship with an embedded application server so it can run everywhere.
We need to create independent spring boot web services for our apps which runs in JBOSS EAP. Can we do the below if its possible.
Spring Boot is typically deployed as a runnable jar but our apps are EAR deployed. Can we bootstrap / launch the spring boot listener / controller when the EAR application starts)
Can we register the services on start to facilitate automated discoverability of services (typically done with consul/ etcd/ zookeeper etc)
You can generate a WAR instead of a JAR and deploy this. If this is not ok you can put the WAR in an EAR
Read the docs: https://docs.spring.io/spring-boot/docs/current/reference/html/howto-traditional-deployment.html
Yes. If you have a service registry in place you can use this with Spring Cloud.
Please read the documentation:
https://spring.io/guides/gs/service-registration-and-discovery/
I have a simple Spring Boot JMS app like this. It have no web-layer and I don't want to add web layer to that app. It should be just one JMS microservice, hidden from web.
But I want to run it inside TomEE (as EJB or something). How can I do it?
you can deploy your app as an ear without any webmodule. Alternatively you can deploy it to openejb-standalone instead of tomee.
I am new to the world of Cloud, CloudFoundry, Saas, PaaS, IaaS, etc.
So I have few very fundamental questions.
Who is better Spring boot or war file in terms of deploying an application or a service to a cloud using cloud foundry?
WHY ?
If I want to deploy my war file on a PaaS cloud then who kicks it off?
As in where is the server?
How will I know which server my war file is deployed to?
Is using Spring-boot with embeded tomcat for PaaS mandatory?
What if my application does not use spring-boot (no spring reference in pom as well) then can I deploy my application war file on cloud? How?
There is nothing like better in war or Spring boot jar. They both are underhood same things, where Spring boot jar manages the server embedded in it and war does not have that.
Cloud Foundry has something like BuildPacks. You need to define a buildpack when you do a cf push. If you select a java build pack it has the things required to run a war on server. It gets the Java, Tomcat Server and all other dependencies needed to run the war.
https://github.com/cloudfoundry/java-buildpack
Cloud foundry creates a droplet, which is basically the execution context with all required dependencies. This is used to run the actual VM on the cloud.
You need not know which server your war is deployed to. That is the basic idea behind the cloud deployment. It may be on a single/multiple VMs under the hood. So what you need to know is something called routes. Routes are the actual addresses to your apps. You need to create routes and bind them to your application, and later app can be accessed using the routes.
https://docs.cloudfoundry.org/devguide/deploy-apps/routes-domains.html#routes
No using embedded servers is not mandatory in Any Cloud PAAS. War can be directly deployed. All PAAS platforms has support for this. Cloud foundry way of doing this is through build packs.
CF : https://docs.cloudfoundry.org/buildpacks/
Heroku : https://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/java-webapp-runner
Any application/ non spring apps which is plain war or jar can be used to run on PAAS platforms.
I am trying to deploy multiple spring boot web app on tomcat. All have the same application.properties.How can I split the configuration files for different app running on tomcat.
Spring Boot doesn't require an external Tomcat, because it contains its own embedded Tomcat. So you can run all of your application in it's own Tomcat on the same machine. All you have to do is to define different ports for your applications via server.port property.